This chapter describes the ways in which Virtualoso Guitar teaches and tests you on notes,
natural harmonics and perfect pitch. The basic idea is that you are given either, sound in the case of perfect
pitch, or sound and music notation in the case of the learning notes and harmonics. You must then enter
the corresponding fret for this sound or notation into the Virtualoso Guitar fretboard window.

When you first start learning these concepts, make sure to set the key signature to "C
Major...a minor". As one of your first goals, you should learn all of the notes on the Guitar up to fret
XII in C Major. This is accomplished via the "Learn Notes" Mode, under the "Mode" menu
item. (If you don't want to hear the sound associated with the notation, you can turn sound off via the Virtualoso
Guitar fretboard window's "Sound" menu.) When you are done with this mode, you can thoroughly drill yourself
on the equivalent locations of notes on the fretboard via the "Play Tunes Anywhere" mode, found in the
chapter on "Learning to Master the Fretboard".

Learning the natural harmonics on the guitar is done with the "Learn Harmonics"
mode. (If you'd like to work on perfect pitch with natural harmonics as well, simply minimize the notation window,
or move it somewhere on your screen where you can't see it.) You may use any key signature with this testing. Learning
the natural harmonics up and down the length of the fretboard completes your mastery of pitch notation.

Perfect pitch is the ability to hear a single pitch, and determine its corresponding
equivalent representations as per Chapter I. Perfect pitch is something that we believe all people can develop
with training. It can be intimidating at first. If you just keep working on it, eventually you will hear notes,
regardless of their octave, as having a certain "feel" or "color". Basically, it has to do
with forming a "memory" of the pitches, similar to memorizing the name "red" for something
that we see as being red. Since there are only 12 different notes in an octave, you essentially only have to learn
12 different colors. If you are trying to learn perfect pitch, we find that it is critical to tune your guitar
to concert pitch (A above middle C=440Hz) every time before you play. (Remember that the guitar is a transposed
instrument, with all sheet music notation being transposed up an octave so that it fits nicely onto a single staff.
Therefore the A we are mentioning is on the first string at the fifth fret.)

Perfect pitch has advantages and disadvantages over what is known as "Relative Pitch".
People that rely exclusively on perfect pitch can be rather difficult to play with, since they think everything
sounds "bad" unless tuned to concert pitch (A=440). We believe that it is actually more important to
have and rely on "Relative Pitch", i.e., given a note, the ability to perceive another note a relative
interval away. With tonal music, the main pitch that the other notes relate to is the tonic of the key that you
are playing in, the music travels away from and returns to this central note. In college level music theory courses
in the United States, you actually sing (in front of the whole class), the scale degrees of the notes on the sheet
music, e.g., "One Three Five One Four Six Five Sev Two Four One...", etc., where "One" corresponds
to the tonic and the other numbers are sung with a relatively higher or lower pitch. In Europe, an absolute system
is used whereby the note names are used in singing, as opposed to the relative scale degrees. No matter what
you're thinking about when you play or sing a note, the most important thing is the sound that you produce.

Getting Started

Use the Mode Menu and select the Learn Notes or Learn Harmonics or Perfect Pitch.

Select the "Position" that you are testing on, i.e., where you will enter notes
into the Virtualoso Guitar fretboard window.

Select the "String" (any one of the six or all at once). For Perfect Pitch
mode, you need to set "Position" to something other than "Open Position" in order to test on
individual strings.

Select the types of "Accidentals" that you want to work on.

Move the mouse into the Virtualoso Guitar fretboard window and click the mouse down when
you think you are on the correct fret. Congratulations! You are learning pitch locations on the guitar.

You may also click on the "Show Lesson" button, in order to see what notes you
are going to be tested on and where they are on the Sheet Music and Virtualoso Guitar fretboard windows. The software
doesn't keep track of your answers until you select "QUIZ..." on all six strings at once. Select the
"Progress Report..." menu item under the "File" menu to review your progress.

Menus

Position

This menu determines the group of frets that you are allowed to enter your responses
into via the mouse. By selecting a different area, you eventually cover the entire fretboard.

String

This menu determines the actual string or strings that you will be tested on.

Accidentals

This menu determines the type of accidentals that you will be tested on.

Key Signature

This menu allows you to change the key signature that is associated with this test. By
changing the key signature, and testing over the same position on the guitar, you exercise a different group of
notes. Your "Progress Report" keeps track of the key signatures that you work with for all QUIZ types.

Buttons

More or Less Info

This button shows or hides the graphical text in the mode window.

Show Lesson

This steps through the notes that you are about to be tested on.

Replay

This button plays the last note that you were queried on.

Fields

Note Name Field

This field shows the name of the correct note after you enter an answer.

Done Bar

This bar fills to the right. When the bar is completely filled you are "Done"
with this test.